Psychosocial research has shown that perceived exposure can influence symptom reporting, regardless of actual exposure. The impact of this phenomenon on the interpretation of results from epidemiological research on environmental determinants of symptoms is unclear.

Citation:

Modeled and perceived RF-EMF, noise and air pollution and symptoms in a population cohort. Is perception key in predicting symptoms? 2018, 639:75-83 Sci. Total Environ.

Modeled and perceived RF-EMF, noise and air pollution and symptoms in a population cohort. Is perception key in predicting symptoms? 2018, 639:75-83 Sci. Total Environ.

en

dc.identifier.issn

1879-1026

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dc.identifier.pmid

29778684

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dc.identifier.doi

10.1016/j.scitotenv.2018.05.007

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dc.identifier.uri

http://hdl.handle.net/10029/621949

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dc.description.abstract

Psychosocial research has shown that perceived exposure can influence symptom reporting, regardless of actual exposure. The impact of this phenomenon on the interpretation of results from epidemiological research on environmental determinants of symptoms is unclear.

en

dc.language.iso

en

en

dc.rights

info:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccess

en

dc.title

Modeled and perceived RF-EMF, noise and air pollution and symptoms in a population cohort. Is perception key in predicting symptoms?